Why does the stone stove Mironoff M3 excel all metallic and brick stoves in steam quality?
A. When water falls on the burning hot surface, it results in a mini-explosion, thereby the water turns into the mix of air and drips of water. The higher the temperature of the surface is, the smaller the drips are. The inside filling of the stone stove Mironoff M3 can be heated to the temperature of more that 500°C, and the diameter of the discharge outlet in the reactor is 50 mm, which allows to increase the internal pressure in the reactor up to 30 atm. Under such pressure, air and water are being mixed at the molecular level, and it allows receiving fine-dispersed, superheated “light” steam, which can be received neither in brick nor in metallic stoves.